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  • Derrick Daye
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    Derrick has spent the past 18 years helping organizations release the full potential of their brands. His experience is as deep as it is diverse encompassing the disciplines of advertising, branding, sales promotion and public relations. Most notably he has worked with the White House Press Corps, Johnson & Johnson and the National Basketball Association.

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    Recognized as one of the world’s leading experts on brand management and marketing, Brad wrote the best selling book Brand Aid, the first comprehensive practical, ‘how-to’ guide on building winning brands. A much sought after consultant and speaker, he writes extensively for the business press and academic journals and is regularly quoted in trade publications.

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« Marketers, Management and the Mind | Main | GM Appointment Shows No Respect for Marketing »

August 18, 2009

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Comments

Burak Babacan

Good points. I totally agree. Also, I think a brand should simplify its promise as much as possible. Simplification should work to create a "whole" which occupies a definite space in the promise pool.

From a holistic point of view, with a simplified promise, it will be easier to have consistency. It will be easy to manage and see the relations of the parts and their consequences.

With a lean structure, a brand should focus on a simple promise and consistency.

Bhavana Jaiswal

Beautifully put Burak! Such marketing communication happens because marketers refuse to put themselves into the consumer's shoes. Theoritically, a company and its various products may be different brands; but the consumer is no fool. In fact, consumers are much smarter than what most marketers give them credit for. I've seen often marketers want to 'educate' consumers. Sometimes consumers don't really need the education. Since we as marketers refuse to accept this, we often fall flat with such attempts, creating problems for ourselves where none existed - all in the name of ' positioning'.

Chris Bannink

I've got your drift. Not every endorsement works fine and company's shouldnt lie.
But company's should innovate like hell to stay ahead of competition.

What should -for instance- Coca Cola do: Their consumers are once upon a time ready/demanding for a low calorie coke. Should they've branded it completely different? Of course not. Perhaps C2 was a mistake, perhaps Coke Classic was also a fail, but Decaf-Diet Coke is staying as well as Coke Zero.

As a whole (holistic?) Coke remains one of the most solid brands in the world in my opinion.
Not every innovation or brand extension is a success. But if you don't try, you die!

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